Fair ball


In baseball, a fair ball is a batted ball that entitles the batter to attempt to reach first base. By contrast, a foul ball is a batted ball that does not entitle the batter to attempt to reach first base. Whether a batted ball is fair or foul is determined by the location of the ball at the appropriate reference point, as follows:
  • if the ball leaves the playing field without touching anything, the point where the ball leaves the field;
  • otherwise, if the ball first lands past first or third base without touching anything, the point where the ball lands;
  • otherwise, if the ball rolls or bounces past first or third base without touching anything other than the ground, the point where the ball passes the base;
  • otherwise, if the ball touches anything other than the ground before any of the above happens, the point of such touching;
  • otherwise,, the point where the ball comes to a rest.
If any part of the ball is on or above fair territory at the appropriate reference point, it is fair; otherwise, it is foul. Fair territory or fair ground is defined as the area of the playing field between the two foul lines, and includes the foul lines themselves and the foul poles. However, certain exceptions exist:
On a fair ball, the batter attempts to reach first base or any subsequent base, runners attempt to advance and fielders try to record outs. A fair ball is considered a live ball until the ball becomes dead by leaving the field or any other method.